The Writer ol Modern tile Essays on €harles Baudelaire ..
WqJter Benjamin Edited by Michael W. Jennings Translated by H...
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The Writer ol Modern tile Essays on €harles Baudelaire ..
WqJter Benjamin Edited by Michael W. Jennings Translated by Howard Eiland, Edmund Jephcott, Rodney Livingston, and Harry Zohn
The Beiknap Press of Harvard University Press Cambridge, Masschusetts, and London, England 2006
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The Writer of Modern Life
The Writer-- of Modern lile
Essays on Charles Baudelaire
WALTER BENJAMIN Edited by Michael W Jennings .
Walter Benjamin's essays on the great French lyric poet Charles Baudelaire revolutionized not just the way we think about Baudelaire, but our understanding of modernity, modernism, and Benjamin. What propels these writings is personal for Benjamin. In these essays, he challenges the
ima~e
of Baudelaire
as late-Romantic dreamer, and evokes instead the modern poet caught in a life-or-death struggle with the forces of the urban commodity capitalism that had emerged in Paris around 1850. The Baudelaire who steps forth from these pages is the flaneur who affixes images as he strolls through mercantile Paris, the ragpicker who collects urban detritus only to turn it into poetry, the modern hero willing to be marked by modern life in its contradictions and paradoxes. He is in every instance the modern artist forced to commodify his literary production: "Baudelaire knew how it stood with the poet: as a flaneur he went to the market; to look it over, as he thought, but in reality to find a buyer!' Benjamin reveals Baudelaire as a social poet of the very first
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Copyright © 2006 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America Additional copyright notices appear on page 307, which constitutes an extension of the copyright page.
Introduction,byMichael W. Jennings Baudelaire
27
Paris, the Capital of the Nineteenth Century 30 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Benjamin, Walter, 1892-1940. [Essays. English. Selections] The writer of modern life : essays on Charles Baudelaire I Walter Benjamin ; edited by Michael W. Jennings. p.cm. Selected essays from Walter Benjamin's Gesammelte Schriften. Includes bibliographical references and index. -ISBN-13: 978-o-674-02287-4 (alk.J?aper) ISBN-10: o-674-02287-4 (alk. paper) 1. Baudelaire, Charles, 1821-1867~Criticism and interpretation. 2. Baudelaire, Charles, 1821-1867-Influence. I. Jennings, Michael William. II. Title. PQ2191.Z5B39713 841' .8-dc22
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2006 2006043584
The Paris of the Second Empire in Baudelaire CentralPark 134 On Sbme.Motifs in Baudelaire ·Notes
213
Index
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The Writer of Modern Life
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lntroduttion By Michael W. Jennings
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Walter Benjamin's essays on Charle~ Baudelaire from the 1930s accomplished nothing less than a wholesale reinvention of the great French poet as the representative writer of urban capitalist modernity.1 Before Benjamin's radical reorientation of our image of the poetL_Baudelaire had usually been considered in purely aesthetic terms-as a late Romantic or as a forerunner of the-French Symbolists. For Benjamin, however, Baudelaire's greatness consisted precisely in his representativeness: in the manner in which his poetryoften against its express intent-laid open the structure and mechanisms of his age. Benjamin was hardly alone among his contemporaries, of course, in his estimation oLBaudelaire as the first .fullf'"" ·" modern writer. In England, Baudelaire was a· touchstone for T. S. Eliot, who translated Baudelaire into English and produced an important essay on Baudelaire's relation to modernity. 2 In Germany, the great lyric poet Stefan George was an important link between Baudelaire and modern German writing; George's translation of Les Fleurs du mal is still in many ways unsurpassed. 3 Yet Eliot and Georgesaw in Baudelaire a writer very different from the one discovered by Benjam1n.4 For Eliot, Baudelaire was the key to adequate spiritual comprehension of modernity, an important predecessor in
Eliot's own quest to find a path informed by religion through the modern wasteland; for George, Baudelaire's poetry opened onto a vast, wholly aestheticized landscape that was proof against the indignities of the modern world. What is at stake in this comparison of Benjamin and his contemporaries is more than merely Benjamin's leftism versus the conservative-or, in the case of George, protofascist-politics of the other poets. If Eliot's Baudelaire was a key voice in the spiritual constitution of modernity, and George's Baudelaire the beacon of all genuinely modern aesthetic production, Benjamin made Baudelaire a complex object: a largely apolitical writer whose poetry we must nevertheless comprehend before we can formulate any responsible cultural politics of modernity. Benjamin resolutely refuses to attribute a single productive social or political insight to Baudelaire himself; the achievement of Benjamin's essays is their ability to expose Les Fleurs du mal as uniquely, . scathingly, terrifyingly symptomatic of Baudelaire's era-and ours. 5 \ In late 1914 or early 1915, when Walter Benjamin was all of twentytwo, he began translating individual poems from Baudelaire's great· lyric cycle Les Fleurs du mal; he returned intermittently to the poems until the early 1920s, when his translation work became intensive. In 1923, Tableaux parisiens: Deutsche Obertragung mit einem Vorwort uber die Aufgabe des Obersetzers von Walter Benjamin (Tableaux parisiens: German Translation with a Foreword Concerning the Task of the Translator, by Walter Benjamin), which included a full translation of the central section of Les Fleurs du mal, appeared in a luxury edition of five hundred. 6 Benjamin had submitted some early translations to Ernst Blass, editor of the journal Die Argonauten, in 1920, and it was Blass who introduced him to the publisher Richard Weissbach, who eventually brought out the slender volume. To Benjamin's great disappointment, neither the introduction-Benjamin's now-famous essay "The Task of the.Translator".,nor the translations themselves met with1nterest either from the educated:public or from critics/ On March 15, 1922, as part of an effort to publicize his book, Benjamin took part in an evening program dedicated to Baudelaire at the Reuss und Pollack bookshop on
MICHAEL W. )ENNINGS
Berlin's Kurfurstendamm, delivering a talk on the poet and reading from his own translations. Although he appears to have spoken frorri memory or perhaps from notes, the two brief texts included here under the title "Baudelaire" (II and III) llfe probably preliminary versions of his remarks. Both of these texts focus on binary relations within Baudelaire's works and "view of things." Much of "Baudelaire III" fixes on the chiastic relations between the terms spleen and ideal in Les Fleurs du mal. Some of the most memorable poetry in the volume is to be found in the cycle of poems called "Spleen": Pluvi6se, irrite contre la ville entiere, De son urne a grands flots verse un froid tenebreux Aux pales habitants du voisin cimetiere Et la mortalite sur les faubourgs brumeux. I
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[February, peeved at Paris, pours a gloomy torrent on the pale lessees of the graveyard next door and a mortal chill on tenants of the foggy suburbs too.] ("Spleen et ideal," LXXV: "Spleen I")
Je suis comme le roi d'un pays pluvieux, Riche, mais impuissant, jeune et pourtant tres~vieux, Qui, de ses precepteurs meprisant.les courbettes, S'ennuie avec ses chiens comme avec d'autres betes. [I'm like the king of a rainy country, rich but helpless, decrepit though still a young man who scorns his fawning tutors, wastes his time on dogs and other animals, and has no fun.] ("Spleen et ideal," LXXVII: "Spleen Ul")8
Benjamin argues that the spleen we see projected here onto the cityscape and the weather is never merely a generalized melancholynot merely the state of being splenetic-but has its source in "that
INTRODUCTION
3
fatally fbundering, doomed flight toward the ideal;' while the ideaL ·itself rises from a ground of spleen: "it is the images of melancholy that kindle the spirit most brightly." This reversal, Benjamin is at pains to point out, takes place neither in the realm of the emotions nor in that of morals, but rather in that of perception. "What speaks to us in his poetry is not the reprehensible confi+sion of [moral] judgment but the permissible reversal of perception." The poem "Correspondances," with its invocation of the figure of synaesthesia, remains the primary evidence for such a claim; but others, such as the lovely poem "L'Invitation au voyage;' also ring changes on the notion of perceptual reversal: Mon enfant, rna soeur, Songe a la douceur D'aller la-bas vivre ensemble! Aimer a loisir, Aimer et mourir Au pays qui te ressemble! · Les soleils mouilles De ces ciels brouilles Pour man esprit ont les charmes Si mysterieux De tes traitres yeux, Brillant atravers leurs larmes.
La, tout-n'est qu'ordre et beaute, Luxe, calme et volupte. [Imagine the magic of living together there, with all the time in the world for loving each other, for loving and dying where even the landscape resembles you. The suns dissolved
4
MICH AEL W. JE NN IN G S
in overcast skies have the same mysterio17s charm for me as your wayward eyes through crystal tears, my sister, my child! All is order there, and elegance, pleasure, peace, and opulence.] 9 If the central motifs of this reading are still grounded in the categories through which Baudelaire had traditionally been received, the other little essay, "Baudelaire n;' breaks new ground and indeed anticipates some of the most important motifs of Benjamin's work in the 1930s. In that piece, Baudelaire emerges as a privileged reader of a special body of photographic work: till1e itself is portrayed as a photographer capturing the "essence of things" on a photograplfic .~ · • plate. These plates, of course, are negatives, and "no one can deduce from the negative ... the true essente of things as they really are." In a remarkable attempt to evoke the originality of the poet's vision, Benjamin attributes to Baudelaire not the ability to develop such a negative, but rather a "presentiment of its real pictur,e"-that is, a vis1on of it in its negative state. In "Baudelaire n;· his earliest reading of the poet, Benjamin attempts to account for a number of aspects of his vision-such as Baudelaire's insight deep into the nature of things, in a poem such as "Le Solei!": Quand, ainsi qu'u2: poete, il descend dans les villes, Il ennoblit le sort des choses les plus viles, Et s'introduit en roi, sans bruit et sans valets, Dans tous les h6pitaux et dans tous les palais. [When, with a poet's will, the sun descends into the cities like a king incognito, impartially visiting palace and hospital, the fate of all things vile is glorified.)
INTRODUCTION
5
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• · ......Or, 'to take another example, Baudelaire's figuration of history as a multiple exposure in "Le Cygne": Andromaque, je pense avous! Ce petit fleuve, Pauvre et triste miroir ou jadis resplendit L'immense majeste de vos douleurs de veuve, Ce Simois menteur qui par vos pleurs grandit, A feconde soudain ma memoire fertile, Comme je traversais le nouveau Carrousel. [Andromache, I think of you! That stream, the sometime witness to your widowhood's enormous majesty of mourning-that mimic Simoi:s salted by your tears suddenly inundates my memory as I cross the new Place du Carrousel.] Or, to take yet _a nother example, Baudelaire's fundamental sel1_S.e-ofthe negative-as the transient and always irreversible-in "Une Charogne": Oui! Telle que vous sere~, o la reine des graces, Apres les derniers sacraments, Quand vous irez, sous l'herbe et les floraisons grasses, Moisir parmi les ossements. Alors, 6 ma beaute! Dites a la vermine Qui vous mangera de baisers, Qui j' ai gard~ la forme et 1' essence divine De mes amours decomposes! [Yes, you will come to this, my queen, after the sacraments, when you rot underground among the bones already there. But as their kisses eat you up,
I
MICHAEL W. JEN N IN GS
my Beauty, tell the worms I've kept the sacred essence, saved the form of my rotted loves!)1° And Benjamin finds in Baudelaire a capability analogous to the one he attributes to Kafka in his great essay of 1934: an intimate knowledge of humanity's "mythical prehistory." 11 It is no doubt this knowledge of primordial good and evil that opens the "true nature" of the photographic negative to Baudelaire's "infinite mental efforts." The centrality of the photographic metilphor, and indeed of the figure of the photographic negative, in Benjamin's first critical ehgagement with Baudelaire is anything but an accident. By late 1921, Benjamin was movirig in the orbit of th~ "G Group," a cena&: of avant-garde artists centered in Berlin. The great Hungarian artist. Laszl6 Moholy-Nagy was part of the earliest formations of the group, and Benjamin came to know him . as early as the autumn of 1921. Moholy's theories of artistic production-and especially his important essay "Production-Reproduction;' published in the avant-garde -jour;ar.De Stijl in July 1922-would preoccupy Benjamin for years to come; but in 1921 and 1922, it is clear that Moholy's photographic practice, which then consisted of experimentation with the photogram (a cameraless photograph that, to the uninitiated, appears to be a negative), played a role in Benjamin's first interpretation of Baudelaire. From the very beginnings of his critical engagement with Baudelaire's work, then, Benjamin was considering Baudelaire's poetry in conjunction with kc:;y categories of modernity and especially of the technologized cultural production that is characteristic of urban commodity capitalism. After Benjamin's bookstore talk in 1922, Baudelaire became a subterranean presence in his work for the next thirteen years. This was a time of radical change in the orientation and practice of Benjamin's criticism. In the years prior to 1924 and the completion of The Origin of German Trauerspiel, his great study of the German Baroque play of mourning, Benjamin had been intent on a reevaluation of German Romanticism, and the development of a theory of criticism
IN TRODU CTI ON
7
with deep roots in that very body of work. During those years, Benjamin had written precisely one essay on twentieth-century literature, an unpublished piece on Paul Scheerbart, author of utopian science fiction. Beginning in 1924, however, he turned his attention and his energies in precipitously new directions: toward contemporary European culture, Marxist politics, and a career as a journalist and wide-ranging cultural critic. By 1926 Benjamin was embarkeq on a program of study and writing that would, he hoped, make him Germany's most widely respected voice on the modernist and avantgarde cultural production of France and the Soviet Union. His frequent visits. to Paris inspired a series of brilliant essays on Paul Valery,' Andre Gide, Julien Green, and Marcel Proust, as well as influential presentations and analyses of the French historical avantgarde. The essay "Surrealism: The Last Snapshot of the European Intelligentsia" (1:929) presents the provisional results of his analysis of French modernism. Baudelaire, as the progenitor of French modernism, of course haunts this work, but Benjamin consistently avoided direct engagement with the poet in this period. Reflection on Baudelaire reentered his writing in the late 1920s as Benjamin began to collect material and ideas for The Arcades Projed (Das Passagen- Werk), his great history of_the_-- ~-,....._---·----~~-~~geoi~~~~...that..er!Y'fle locates the decisive historical "f:hift to the modern era, then, not so much in large-scale modificav/ ions in the socie.tal totality but rather in changes in concrete societal artifacts and ~n the way they are experienced and understood. As he put it in · a draft version of the conclusion to the essay, the creations and forms of life detenrtip_ed by commodity production "pre-
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8
MICHAEL W. TENNINGS
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sent themselves as a phantas~ag~ria._ ... The world that is domi~ nated by these phantasmagonas 1s-m a key word found for it b Baudelaire-the 'Modern."' 12 Benjamin worked on this enormous project until the end of his life, never bringing it to completion; in the years of his exile from fascist Germany after 1933, much of the work was supported by stipends from the Institute for Social Research. In 1935, Fritz Pollack, the co-director of the institute, suggested that Benjamin produce an expose of the project that could be shown to potential sponsors. The text "Paris, the Capital of the Nineteenth Century" (included in this volume) was in .fact that expose; it thus represents Benjamin's first attempt to describe the scope and focus of The Arcades Project. Baudelaire would, at this stage of the project, have played a key, though not central role: the utopian socialist Charles Fourier, the photographer Louis Jacques Daguem!, the caricaturist Grandville (Jean Ignace -Isidore Gerard), the-constitutional monarch Louis Philippe, and the city planner Baron Georges Eugene Haussmann would have appeared alongside Baudelaire in leading .roles in the drama of modernity played out amid the arcades, panoramas, world exhibitions, and barricades of Paris. The pages given over to Baudelaire are perhaps the densest in the essay: Benjamin:' presents, in dizzying abbreviature, a number of the central motifs of his critique of modernity: the flaneur who strolls through the urban crowd as prosthetic vehicle of a new vision; the department store as phantasmagoric space of display and consumption; the commercialization and final alienation of the intelligentsia; the prostitute as concatenated image-of death and woman, "seller and sold in one"; the gradual denaturing of art as it is subsumed by commodification and fashion; and the replacement of experience by the new concept of information. These are ainong the central categories that will inform the· great essays on Baudelaire to come. As Benjamin continued to amass materialfor ·his study of the arcades, and to develop a theory adequate to that material, his friends at the !nstitute for Social Research became increasingly eager to see some part of the project in print. In 1937,- at the urging of Max
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Horkheimer, the institute's director, Benjamin reconceptualized the project as a study of Baudelaire that would draw on the central concerns of The Arcades Project as a whole. 13 He produced a detailed outline that organized excerpts from his notes under section and chapter headings. 14 The book project, which bore the workiiig title Charles Baudelaire: A Lyric Poet in the Era of High Capitalism, would have had three parts: (1) "Baudelaire as Allegorist"; (2) "The Paris of the Second Empire in Baudelaire"; and (3) "The C()mmodity as Po-etic Object." Working feverishly throughout the s~mmer and fall of 1938 in Skovsbostrand, Denmark, where he was a guest of his friend the great German dramatist Bertolt Brecht,)3enjamin completed the middle third of the Baudelaire book and submitted this text as an essay entitled "The Paris of the Second Empire in Baudelaire" to the Zeitschrift fur Sozialforschung (Journal for Social Research) in New York. Benjamin's first major work on Baudelaire is one of the greatdt essays of literary criticism from the twentieth century; it is also one of the most dem~nding of its reader, requiring not merely inordina:te contributions of imagination and analysis, but a thorough knowledge of Benjamin's other work. The essay begins, disconcertingly, not with a,consideration of Baudelaire's poetry, or even of Baudelaire • · e•llirriself, but with the evocation nf a particular "intellectual physiognomy": that of the conspiratorial face of the boheme. For Benjamin, the bohemians were not primarily artistes starving in garrets-think of Rodolfo and Mimi in Puccini's La Boheme-but a motley collection of amateur and professional conspirators who imagined the overthrow of the regime of Napoleon Ill, France's self-elected emperor. In the opening pages ofthe essay, Benjamin establishes relays between the tactics employed by these figures and the aesthetic strategies that characterize Baudelaire's poetic production. If "surprising proclamations and mystery-mongering, sudden sallies, and impenetrable irony were part of the raison d'etat of the Second Empire;' Benjamin says, Baudelaire's poetry is likewise driven by "the enigmatic stuff of allegory" and "the mystery-mongering of the conspirator." This physiognomic evocation of Baudelaire leads not to-a~read10
MICHAEL W. JENNINGS
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d;void of all resistance to the social order .of the ~-~?_.~9i.~~- c~.:n.ttib.ute.d..to the ''p.baotasmagQ_riaiof r~ The concept of phantasmagoria is pervasive in Benjamin's late writings on.Baudelaire. Originally an eighteenth-century illusionistic optic~< "•'"'''}"... "''~ ·-· ••·~ '' ,:.~·,.V''o'{~.'.l '. '".U"". •-'"'- •'~." ....._, ~" ... ICH'"l'..$ •-.::~t-:,..,......._._,_ __ •' ' -• •. • ,_ .-.,,,,_ . ,._,, ,_-• • • •• ; ··, '''• ·• - ·• · • · ·~• · -•.•· •·c •~ • ,
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r!{ail~~~:~~~~-~iQY§'ithi~··"~;~~~~ ers.-The enthronement of the commodity, with its luster of distra..~ is the secret theme of Grandville's artY This is consistent with the split between utopian and cynical elements in his work. Its ingenuity in representing inanimate objects corresponds to what Marx calls the "theological niceties" of the commodity. 24 They are manifest clearly in the specialiti-a category of goods which appears at this
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WA LTER BENJAMIN
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Fashion: "Madam Death! Madam Death!" __:LEOPARD!, "DIALOGUE BETWEEN FASHION AND DEATH" 25
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~i!L~£L£rm.WB..~:r.~.uiLe..FiiJJ...~'tobk,J?M.~fE.t..t~J!Kiii:f~'liiiE1~ P!l!:.tPitt£1J!.~l!.~?...Ea.~,JtJJ;l,o..e~~t-WJ:ien this vein, too, was exhaysted, a "physiology" of the nations was attempted. Nor was the "physiology" of animals neglected, for animals have always been an innocuous: subject. Innocuousness was of the essence. In his studies on the his . tory of caricature, Eduard Fuchs points out that the beginning of th physiologies coincided with the so-called September Laws, the tight ened censorship of 1S36. 95 These laws summarily forced out of poli-~ ti.cs an array of capable artists with a background in satire. If that· could be done in the graphic arts, the government's maneuver wa _
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THE PAR IS OF THE SECOND EMPIRE IN BAUDELAIRE
67
.ibound to be all the more successful in lit~rature, for there w~s no po1llitical energy there that. could compare-w1th that of a Daum1er. Reacltion, then, was the principle "which explains the c~lossal para_de of
tbourgeois life that . .. 'be~an in France.... Every_thmg passed m retview.... Days of celebratwn and days of mourmng, work and play, ! conjugal customs and bachelors' practices, the family, the home, chile · "96 dren, school, society, the theater, character types, pro1esswns. The leisurely quality of. these descriptions fits the style of the flaneur who goes botanizing on the asphalt. But even in those days it was impossible to stroll about everywhere in the city. Before Haussmann, .wide pavements were rare; the narrow ones afforded little protection from vehicles. 97 Flanerie could hardly have assumed the importance it did without the arcades. "These arcades, a recent invention of industrial luxury;' says an illustrated guide to Paris of 1ss2, "are-glass-roofed, marble-paneled corridors extending through whole blocks of buildings, whose owners have joined together for such enterprises. Lining both sides of these corridors, which get their light from above, are the most elegant shops, so that the passage is a city, a world in miniature." It is in this world that the flaneur is at home; he provides the arcade-"the favorite venue of strollers· and smokers, the haunt of all sorts of little metiers" 98-with its c~ronicler and philosopher. As-for himself, the arcade provides him with an unfailing remedy for the -kind of b~redom that easily arises under the : baleful eye of a sated reactionary regime. In the words of Guys as \ quoted by Baudelaire, "Anyone who is capable of being bored in a crowd is a blockhead. I repeat: a _blockhead, and a contemptible f one."99 The arcades are something between a street and an _:interieur. \ rf one can say that the physiologies employ an artistic device, it is the \ proven device of the feuilleton-namely, the transformation of _the boulevard into an interieur. The street becomes a dwelling place for the fla.neur; he is as much at home among house fa:~·~:r.~ ..,.~-·"'" .w.,.~.......... "........--... - ~.-- · acteristic of the soCiology of the big city. Interpersonal relationships .. .. .. in big cities are mstmguished by a marked preponderance of visual ... .. ... . . . . --...... ,,. __ ... ________...-..._,... ... activity over aural actlvl!}:; The main reason for this is the public •.....__ . . .,.,.,.,..~-->ru-)Y~~~ --~~ans of tra?sporta~~~2re the development of buses, railroads, and trams in the nineteenth century, people had never been in situa._tions where they had to look at one another for long minutes or even hours without. speaking to one another." 101 These new situations were, as Simmel recognized, .not pleasant. In his Eugene Aram, Bulwer-Lytton orchestrated his description of big-city dwellers with a reference to Goethe's remark that each person, the most worthy as well as the most despicable, car~;ies around a secret which would make him hateful to everyone else if it became known. 102 The physiologies were just the thing to brush such disquieting notions aside as insignificant. They constituted, so to speak, the blinkers of the "nar-row-minded city animal" that Marx wrote about. 103 A description of the proletarian in Foucaud'sPhysiologie de l'industrie franr;aise shows what a thoroughly limited vision these physiologies offered when the need arose: "Quiet enjoyment is almost exhausting for a workingman. The house in whiCh he lives may be surrounded by greenery
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-....,:·.-'"'-"""·"~:r.t I-Q.."J'"" His dream of such an existence disdains community with any terrestrial nature and holds only to clouds. This is explicit in the first prose poem in Le Spleen de Paris. Ma~y of his poems contain cloud mo" tifs. What is most appalling is the defilement of the clouds ("La Beatjicen.
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The souvenir [Andenken] is a secularized relic. The souvenir is the complement to "isolated e:werience."6a In· it is precipitated the increasing self-estrangement of humanbeings, whose past is inventoried as dead effects. In the nineteenth century, allegory withdrew from the world around u's to settle in the inner world. The relic comes from the cadaver; the souvenir comes from the defunct experience [Erfahrung] which thinks of itself, euphemistically, as living [Erlebnis].
Les Fleurs du mal is the last book of poems to have had an impact throughout Europe. Before that, perhaps Ossian? Das Buch der Lieder~9
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Les Fleurs du mal bears a hidden resemblance to Dante in the emphatic way it traces the itinerary of a creative life. There is no other book of poems in which the poet presents himself with so little vane ity and so much force. According to Baudelaire's experience, autumri is the true ground of creative genius. The great poet is, as it were, a creature of autumn. "L'Ennemi;' "Le Soleil." "De l' essence du rire" 67 contains nothing other than the theory of satanic laughter. In this essay, Baudelaire goes so far as to view even smiling from the standpoint of such laughter. Contempo-
~ WALTER BENJAMIN
Allegorical emblems return as commodities. Allegory is the armature of modernity. There is, in Baudelaire, a reluctance to awaken echoes-whether in the soul or in space. His poetry is occasionally coarse, but is never sonorous. His mode of expression deviates as little from his experience as the gestures of a consummate prelate deviate from his person.-
CENTRAL PA~K
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Something that must be clarified: the importance of heroic melancholy for intoxication [Rausch] and for the inspiration of images.
(331 Jugendstil appears as' the productive misunderstanding by ~hich ~e "new" became the "modern." Naturally, this misunderstandmg ongr-
When yawning, the human being himself opens like an abyss. He makes himself resemble the time stagnating around him.
nates in Baudelaire.
Modernity stands opposed to antiquity; the new, to what is always the same. (Modernity: the masses. Antiquity: the city of Paris.) The st~eets of Paris, in Meryon's rendering: chasms-and high above
What good is talk of progress to a world sinking into rigor mortis? Baudelaire found the experience of such a world set down with incomparable power ,in the work of Poe, who thus became irreplaceable for him. Poe described the world in which Baudelaire's whole poetic enterprise had its prerogative. Compare the Medusa's head in Nietzsche.
them float the clouds.
135) The dialectical image is an image that flashes up. The image of what has been-in this case, the image of Baudelaire-must be caught in this way, flashing up in the now of its recognizability. 70 The redemption enacted in this way, and solely in this way,.is won only against the perception of what is being irredeemably lost. The metaphorical _ passage from the introduction to Jochmann should be introduced here. 7 1
1341 The concept of exclusive copyright was not nearly so widely accepted in Baudelaire's dayas it is today. Baudelaire often republished his poems two or three times withouthaving anyone object. He ran into difficulties with this only toward the end of his life, with the Petits
The concept of progress must be grounded in the idea of catastrophe. That things are "status quo" is the catastrophe. It is not an everpresent possibility but what in each case is given. Strindberg's idea: hell is not something th.at awaits us, but this life here and now. Redemption depends on the tiny fissure in the continuous catastrophe.
poemes en prose. Inspiration for Hugo: words present themselves to him,_like ~mage~, as a surging mass. Inspiration for Baudelaire: words appear m their place as jf by magic-the result of a highly studied procedure. In this procedure, the image plays a decisive role.
• t6Q
Eternal recurrence is an attempt to combine the two antinomic principles of happiness: that of eternity ;and that of the "yet again."-The idea of eternal recurrence conjures the speculative idea (or phantasmagoria) of happiness from the misery of the times. Nietzsche's heroism has its counterpoint in the heroisp1 of Baudelaire, who conjures the phantasmagoria of modernity from the· misery of philistinism.
The reactionary attempt to turn technologically determined formsthat is, dependent variables:._into constants can be found not only in Jugendstil but in Futurism.
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The development which led Maeterlinck, in the course of a long life, · to an attitude of extreme rea.ction is a logical one.
not only of his own future greatness but of theirs. Fifty years after Baudelaire's death, this dream was over.
Explore the question of how far the extremes to be encompassed . within redemption are those of "too early" and "too late."
Baroque allegory sees the corpse only from the outside. Baudelaire sees it also from within.
That Baudelaire was hostile to progress was the indispensable condition for his ability to master Paris in his verse. Compared to his po- . · · etry of the big city, later work of this type is marked by weakness, n·ot least where it sees the city as the throne of progress. But: Walt Whitman??
That the stars are absent from Baudelaire's poetry is the most conclusive sign of its tendency to eradicate semblance [ Tendenz seiner
(36)
That Baudelaire was attracted to late Latin culture may have been linked to the strength of his allegorical intention.
It was the weighty social grounds for male impotence which in fact · turned the Golgotha-way trod by Baudelaire into one socially 01\ dained. Only this explains why, to sustain him on his travels, he re- · ceived a preciousrold coin from the treasury amassed by Fnlrf\n,p::~n society. On its face it showed the figure of Death; on its reverse, Mel- · ancholia sunk in brooding meditation. This coin was allegory.
Baudelaire's Passion as an imaie d'Epinal in the style of the usual Baudelaire literature. "Reve parisien" as a fantasy about productive forces that have been shutdown. Machinery in Baudelaire becomes a figure for destructive powers. The human skeleton is not the least part of such machinery. The residential character of the rooins in early factories, despite all their impractical I;Jarbarity, has this one- peculiarity: the factory . owner can be imagined in them as a kind of incidental figure in a painting, sunk in contemplation of his machines and dreaming
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Lyrik zur Scheinlosigkeit].
1371
Considering the importance of forbidden forms of sexuality in Baudelaire's life and work, it is remarkable that the bordello plays not the slightest part in either his private documents or his work. There is no . counterpart, within this sphere, to a poem such as "Le Jeu." (But see · "Les Deux Bonnes Soeurs.") 72 The introduction of allegory must be deduced from the situation in which art is conditioned by technological development; and the melancholic temper of this poetry can be portrayed only in terms of allegory. In the flfmeur, one might say, is reborn the sort of idler that Socrates picked out from the Athenian marketplace to be his interlocutor. Only, there is no longer a Socrates, so there is no one to address the idler. And the slave labor that guaranteed him his leisure has likewise ceased to exist. The key to Ba~delaire's relationship with Gautier should be sought in the younger man's more or less clear awareness that even in art his
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destructive impulse encounters no inviolable limit. For the allegorical intention, this limit was certainly riot absolute. Baudelaire's reactions to the neo-paga11 school reveal this situation clearly. He could hardly have written his essay on Dupont, had not his own critique of the concept of art been at least as radical as Dupont's. 73 Baudelaire tried successfully to conceal these tendencies with his invocation of Gautier.
(38) The peculiarities both of Hugo's faith in progress,and of his pantheism were surely not unrelated to the messages received in spiritualist .. seances. This dubious circumstance, however, pales before that of the constant communication between his poetry and the world of poltergeists. In fact, the special quality of his poetry lay far less in its real or apparent adoption of motifs of spiritualist revelation than in the fact that his poetry was exhibited, so to speak, before the spirit world. This spectacle is difficult to reconcile with the attitude of other poets. In Hugo, it is through the crowd that nature. exercises its elemental rights over the city. (J32,1.) On the concept of the multitude and the relationship between "the crowd" and "the masses." Baudelaire's original interest in allegory is not linguistic but optical. "Les images, rna grande, rna primitiv(;': passion." 74 Question: When does the commodity begin to emerge in the image of the city? Here it would be very important to have statistics on the intrusion of display windows into building fa~ades .
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139) Mystification, in Baudelaire, is a form of apotropaic magic, similar to the lie among prostitutes. Many of his poems have their incomparable moment at the beginning-where they are, so to speak, new. This has often been pointed out. . The mass-produced article was Baudelaire's model. His "Americanism" has its firmest foundation here. He wanted to create a poncif Lemaitre-assured him that he had succeeded. · the commodity has taken the place of the allegorical mode of apprehension. In the form which prostitution has taken in big cities, the woman appears not only as a commodity but, in the most graphic sense, as a mass-produced article. This can be seen in the way the individual expre-ssion is artificially concealed by a professional .one, as happens . __with the use of cosmetics. That this aspect of the whore was sexually crucial for Baudelaire is indicated not least by the fact that the.background for his numerous evocations of the whore is never the bordello, but often the street.
1401 In Baudelaire, it is very important that the "new" in no way contributes to progress. At any rate, serious attempts to come to terms with · .the idea of progress are hardly ever found in his work. His hatred was directed above all at "faith in progress," as at a heresy, a false teaching, not a commonplace error. Blanqui, on the other hand, displays no antipathy to the belief in progress; he quietly heaps scorn on the
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idea. One should not necessarily conclude from ·this that he was untrue to his politiCal credo. The activities of a professional conspirator like Blanqui certainly do not presuppose any belief in prog- . ress-they merely presuppose a determination to do away with pres- · ent injustice. This firm resolve to snatch humanity at the last moment from the catastrophe looming at every turn is characteristic of Blanqui-more so than of any other revolutionary politician of the time. He always refused to develop plans for what comes "later." One can easily see how Baudelaire's conduct in 1848 accords with all . this.
1411 Confronted with the scant success of his work, Baudelaire threw_ himself into the bargain. He flung himself after his work, and thus, to the end, confirmed in his own person what he had said: that titution was an unavoidable necessity for the poet. One of the decisive questions for an understanding of Baudelaire's poetry is how the face of prostitution was changed by the rise of ·· the great cities. For this much is certain: Baudelaire gives expres- .. sion to the change-it is one o(the great themes of his poetry. With . the emergence of big cities, prostitution comes to possess new arcana. Among the earliest of these is the labyrinthine character of the city itself. The labyrinth, whose image has become part of the flaneur's flesh and blood, seems to have been given, as it were, a colored border by prostitution. The first arcanum known to prostitution is thus the ·mythical aspect of the city as labyrinth. This includes, as one would expect, an image of the Minotaur at its cen- ·. ter. That he brings death to the individual is not the essential · fact. What is crucial is the image of the deadly power he embodc · ies. And this, too, for inhabitants of the great cities, is something new.
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1421 Les Fleurs du mal as an a,rsenal: Baudelaire wrote certain of his poems in order to destroy others written before his own. Valery's wellknown remarks could be developed further in this direction.7 5 To elaborate on Valery's comments: It is highly significant that Baudelaire encountered competitive relations in the production of poetry. Of course, personal rivalries between poets are as old as the hills. But here the rivalry is transposed into competition on the open market. The goal was victory in that arena, not the patronage of a prince. In this context, it was a real discovery for Baudelaire that hewas not The disorganization. of poetic schools, competing against individuals. . . of "styles;' is the complement of the open market, which reveals itself to the poet as his audience. In Baudelaire, the public as such comes into view for the first time-this was the reason he did not fall victim to the "sembl-ance" of poetic schools. And conversely, because the "school" was for him a mere epiphenomenon, he experienced the public as a more authentic reality.
(431 Difference between allegory and parable. Baudelaire and Juvenal. The decisive difference is that when Baudelaire describes degeneracy and vice, he always includes himself; The gestus of the satirist is foreign to him. Admittedly, this applies only to Les Fleurs du mal, which differs entirely in this regard from the prose pieces. Fundamental observations on the relation between the theoretical writings of poets and their poetry. In the latter, they disclose a region of their inner life which is not generally available to their reflection.
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This should be demonstrated in Baudelaire-with reference to others such as Kafka ancl Hamsun.7 6 The lastingness of a literary work's effect is inversely proportional to the obviousness of its material content. (Its truth content? See the study on Elective Affinities.) 77
Les Fleurs du mal undoubtedly gained importance from the fact that Baudelaire left no novel.
(441 Melanchthon's phrase "Melencolia ilia heroica" provides the most . perfect definition of Baudelaire's genius/8 But melancholy in the nineteenth century was different from what it had been in the seventeenth. The key figure in early allegory is the corpse. In late allegory, it is the "souvenir" [Andenken]. The "souvenir" is the schema of the commodity's transformation into an object for the collector. The ... I correspondances are, objectively, the endlessly varied resonances be- . tween one souvenir and the others. "J'ai plus de souvenirs que si j'avais mille ans." 79
On the truncated endings of materialist studies (in contrast to .t1i.( ... dose of the book on the Baroque.)so The allegorical viewpoint, which generated literary style in the seventeenth century, had lost this role by the nineteenth. As an allegorist, Baudelaire was isolated, and his isolation was in a sense that of a straggler. (In his theories, this belatedness is sometimes provocatively emphasized.) If the stylistic impetus of allegory in the nineteenth century was slight, so too was its tendency to encourage routine, ·. which left such diverse traces in the seventeenth century. To some extent, this routine mitigated the destructive tendency of allegory-its stress on the artwork's fragmentary nature. Written ca. April 1938-February 1939; unpublished in Benjamin's lifetime. Gesammelte Schiften, I, 655-690. Translated by Edmund Jephcott and Howard Eiland.
The heroic tenor of Baudelairean inspiration lies in the fact that in his work memory gives way to 'the souvenir. In his work, there is a striking lack of "childhood memories." Baudelaire's eccentric individuality was a mask behind which he tried to conceal-out of shame, one might say-the supra-individual necessity cif his way of life and, to a certain extent, his fate. From the age of seventeen, Baudelaire led the life of a litterateur. One cannot say that he ever thought of himself as an "intellectual" [Geistiger], or devoted himself to "the life of the mind" [das Geistige] ; The registered trademark for artistic production had not yet been devised. 168
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on some Motils in Baudelaire
I
••
Baudelaire envisaged readers to whom the reading of lyric poetry would present difficulties. The introductory poem of Les Fleurs du :. mal is addressed to these readers. Willpower and the ability to con~ centrate are not their strong points. What they prefer is sensual plea- ...· sure; they are familiar with the "spleen" which kills interest and . receptiveness. It is strange to come across a lyric poet who addresses e • "htmself to such readers~the l~ast rewarding type of audience. There is of course a ready explanation for this. Baudelaire wanted to be understood; he dedicates his book to those who are like him. The poem addressed to the reader ends with the salutation: "Hypocrite lecteur,-mon semblable,-mon frere!" 1 It might be more fruitful to put it another way and say: Baudelaire wrote a book which from the ·· very beginning had little prospect of becoming an immediate popu~ · lar success. The kind of reader he envisaged is described in the intra" ·: ductory poem, and this turned out to have been a far-sighted judg" ment. He would eventually find the reader his work was intended for. This situation-the fact, in other words, that the conditions for reception of lyric poetry have become increasingly unfavorable-is .·•. borne out by three particular factors, among others. First of all, lyric poet has ceased to represent the poet per se. He is no longer_a
"minstrel," as Lamartine still was; he has become the representative of a genre. 2 (Verlaine is a concrete example of this specialization; Rimbaud must already be regarded as an esoteric figure, a poet who, ex officio; kept a distance between his public and his work.)3 Second, there has been no success on a mass scale in lyric poetry since Baudelaire. (The lyric poetry of Victor Hugo was still capable of evoking powerful reverberations when it first appeared. In Germany, Heine's Buch der Lieder marks a watershed.) 4 The third factor follows from this-namely, the greater coolness of the public, even toward the lyric poetry that has been handed down as part of its own cultural heritage. The period in question dates back roughly to the midnineteenth century. Throughout this span, the fame of Les Fleurs du mal has steadily increased. This book, which the author · expected would be read by the least indulgent of readers and which was at first read by only a few indulgent ones, has, over the decades, acquired the stature of a classic and become one of the most widely printed ones as well. If conditions for a positive reception of lyric poetry have become ..less favorable, it is reasonable tb assume that only in rare instances does lyric poetry accord with the experience of its readers. This may be due to a change in the structure of their experience. Even though one may approve of this development, one may find it difficult to specify the nature of the change. Turning to philosophy for an answer, one encounters a strange situation. Since the end of the nineteenth century, philosophy has made a series of attempts to grasp "true" experience, as opposed to the kind that manifests itself in the · standardized, denatured life of the civilized masses. These effoi'ts are usually classified under the rubric of ''vitalism." Their point of departure, understandably enough, has not been the individual's H'fe in society. Instead they have invoked poetry, or preferably nature.· most recently, the age of myths. Dilthey's book Das Erlebnis und die Dichtung repre.sents one of the earliest of these efforts, which culminate with Klages and Jung, who made common cause with fascism. 5 Towering above this literature is Bergson's early monumental work, Matiere et memoire. 6 To a greater extent than the other writings in
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·.this field, it preserves links with empirical research. It is oriented toward biology. As the. title suggests, it regards the structure of mem,c . ory [Gedachtnis] a~ decisive for the philosophical structure of experi" . .· ence [ErfahrungV Experience is indeed a matter of tradition, irt · ollective existence as well .as private life. It is the product less of .· · acts firmly anchored in memory [Erinnerung] than of accumu~ated . and frequently unconscious data that flow together in memory · [Gedachtnis ]. Of course, the historical determination of memory is not at all Bergson's intention. On the contrary, he rejects any historical determination of memory. He thus manages to stay clear of that. · • experience from which his own philosophy evolved, or, rather, in re" · action to which it arose. It was the alienating,blinding experience of. the age of large-scale industrialism. In shutting out this experience, . the eye perceives a complementary experience-in the form of its •· spontaneous afterimage, as it were. Bergson's philosophy represents ·.• an attempt to specify this afterimage and fix it as a permanent re~ cord. His philosophy thus indirectly furnishes a clue to the experi- . ence which presented itself undistorted to Baudelaire's eyes, in the . figure of his reader.
n The reader of Matiere et memoire, with its particular definition of nature of experience in duree, 8 is bound to conclude that only a poet ·;. can be the adequate subject of such an experience. And it was indeed .··. a poet who put Bergson's theory of experience to the test. Proust's: work A Ia Recherche du temps perdu may be regarded as an attempt to .· .• produce experience, as Bergson imagines it, in a synthetic way under today's soCial conditions, for there is less and less hope that it come into being in a natural way. Proust, incidentally, does not evade . the question in his work. He even introduces a new f~~t-~r, one that involves an immanent critique of Bergson. Bergson emphasized the antagonism between the vita activa and the specific vita rn't1tPtn--.. • platiiia which arises from memory. But he leads us to believe
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turning to the contemplative realization of the stream of life is a matter of free choice. From the start, Proust indicates his diver.· gent view in his choice of terms. In his work the memoire pure of Bergson's theory becomes a memoire involontaire. Proust immedi.•. ately confronts this involuntary mem?ry with a voluntary memory, · one that is in the service of the intellect. The first pages of his great novel are devoted to makfng this reiationshipclear. In the reflection which introduces the term, Proust tells us that for many years he had a very indistinct memory of the town of Combray, where he had • spent part of his childhood. One afternoon, the taste of a kind of .· pastry called a madeleine (which he later mentions often) trans. ported him back to the past, whereas before then he had been limited to the promptings of a memory which obeyed the call of conscious ·.· . attention. This he calls memoire volontaire. Its signal characteristic is that the information it gives about the past retains no trace of that past. "It is the same with our own p~st. In vain we try to conjure it up again; the efforts of our intellect :are futile." In sum, Proust says the past is situated "somewhere beyond the reach of the intellect and its field of operations, in some material object ... , though we have no idea which one it is. And whetherwe come upon this object we die, or whether we never encounter it, depends entirely on · According to Proust, it is a matter of chance whether an individ.• ual forms an image of himself, whether he can take hold of his expe. rience. But there is nothing inevitable about the dependence on chance in this matter. A person's inner concerns are not by nature of ail inescapably private character. They attain this char;:tcter only after the likelihood decreases that one's .external concerns will be assimito one's experience. Newspapers constitute one of many indicaof such a decrease. If it were the intention of the press to have the reader assimilate the information it supplies as part of his own it would not achieve its purpose. 1;3ut its intention is just the opposite, and it is achieved: to isolate events from the realm in · they could affect th~ experience of the reader. The principles
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/1 '\/
of journalistic information (newness, brevity, clarity, and; above all, lack of connection between. the individual news items) contribute as . much to this as the layout of the pages and the style of writing. (Karl •· Kraus never tired of demonstrating the extent to which the linguistic · habitus of newspapers paralyzes the imagination of their readers.) 10 Another reason for the isolation of information from experience is that the former does not enter "tradition." Newspapers appear · in large editions. Few readers can boast of having any information . that another reader may need from them.-Historically, the various modes of communication have competed with one another. The replacement of the older relation bv iuform?tion, and of ipformatio~ . h.X~~l!.:'~~.,.r.e~reasing atrophy of experience. In turn, · there is a contrast between all these forms and the story, which is one ~-.._....,.;
(f
'
.-
~
of the oldest f~~S~~!.l.ts~tio~: A, ~t?~z:.do~s ,n.Qt ailE 1_2~ .. ve_i:i9~:ir.~.Q!:.~;.~,"-~~~.~w.h~~"'the pt'lf.~~f'2rm.!:!?.~:.,;a,th~S·· .· it e,ph,~.P,sJhe...~~tin....th~Ji~,Qi,Wtor eller in order to ass 1ton a~.~-~£,~;l!S~? th~.bJt~.R.,e~r,tJ;pe . tr.~~ vessel bears the trace of the ,P,and. ··-~~Proust's eight-volume novel gives some idea of the effort it took;·. to restore the figure of the storyteller to the current generation~ ·.· Proust undertook this task wi,t h magnificent consistency. From the outset, this involved him in a fundamental problem: reporting on his own childhood. In saying that it was a matter of chance whether the : problem could be solved at all, he took the measure of its In connection with tllese reflections, he coined the phrase m~~mtHr~··:> involontaire. This concept bears the traces of the situation that en~ ' gendered it; it is part of the inventory of the individual who is isoc lated in various ways. Where there is experience [Erfahrung] in · strict sense of the word, certain contents of the individual past com~ · bine in the memory [Gedachtnis] with material from the -.u •.'""'..... past 11 Rituals, with their ceremonies and their festivals nowhere recalled in Proust's work), kept producing the amalgamation of these two elements of memory over and over again. They .
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triggered recollection 12 at certain times and remained available t() . memory throughout people's lives. In this way, voluntary and involuntary recollection cease to be mutually exclusive.
In seeking a more substantial definition of what appears in Proust's memoire de ['intelligence as a by-product of Bergson's theory, we would do well to go back to Freud. In 1921 Freud published his essay Beyond the Pleasure Principle, which hypothesizes a correlation be. tween memory (in the sense of memoire involontaire) and consciousness.U The following remarks, though based on that essay, are not intended to confirm it; we shall have to content ourselves with testing the fruitfulness of Freud's hypothesis in situations far removed from the ones he had in mind when he yvrote. Such situations are more ·• likely to have been familiar to Freud's pupils. Some of Reik's writings on his own theory of memory are in line with Proust's distinction between involuntary and voluntary recollection. 14 "The function of memory [ Gedachtnis]," Reik writes, "is to protect our impressions; ..u.uu•~._ .....,_.. [ Erinnerung] aims at their dissolution. Memory is es-, • sentially conservative; reminiswg.,_destwctive" 15 .Freud's fundamen· tal thought, on which thes.e remarks are based, is the assumption that "emerging consciousness takes the place of a memory trace." 16 Therefore, "it would be the special characteristic of consciousness · unlike what happens in all other systems of the psyche, the • · "'"·rn"rc'rv process does not leave behind a permanent change in its . dements, but expires, as it were, in the phenomenon of bec9ming . conscious." The basic forn;mla of this hypothesis is that "becoming conscious and leaving behind a memory trace are incompatible proCesses within one and the same system." Rather, vestiges of memory are "often most powerful and most enduring when the incident •which left them behind was one that never entered consciousness." . Put in Proustiari terms; this means that only what has not been experienced explicitly and consciously, what has not happened to the
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subject as an isolated experience [Erlebnis], can become a component of memo ire involontaire. According to Freud, the attribution of · · "permanent traces as the basis of memory" to processes of stimulation is reserved for ''other systems;' which must be thought of as different from consciousness. In ·Freud's view, consciousness as such · •· receives no memory traces whatever, but h.as another important function: protection against stimuli. "For a living organism, protec- .. tion against sti~uli is almost more important than the reception of ..·..· stimuli. The protective shield is equipped with its own-store of energy and must above all strive to preserve the special forms of con- · versiop of energy operating in it against the effects of the excessive energies at work in the external.world-effects)hat tend toward an equalization of potential and hence toward destruction." The.threat ; posed by these energies is the threat of shocks. The more readily con- •. sciousness registers these shocks, the less likely they are to have a . traumatic effect. Psychoanalytic theory strives to understand the nac ture of these traumatic shocks "in terms of how they break through the shield that protects against stimuli." According to this theory, i fright gains "significance" in proportion to the "absence of any pre\ paredness for anxiety." . · Freud's investigation was occasioned by the sort of dream that 'may afflict accident survivors-those who develop neuroses which cause them to relive the catastrophe in whl.ch they were involved. · Dreams of this kind, according to Freud, "endeavor to master the stimulus retroactively, by de~eloping the anxiety whose omission was · the cause of the traumatic neurosis." Valery seems to have had some- : thing similar in mind. The coincidence is worth noting, for Valery was among those interested in the special functioning of psychic mechanisms under present-day conditions. 17 (Moreover, Valery able to reconcile this interest with his poetic production, which re- ' mained exclusively lyric. Be thus emerges as the only author who goes back directly to Baudelaire.) "The impressions and sense ceptions of humans," Valery writes, "actually belong in the r~f.onn,_,, .. of surprises; they are evidence of an insufficiency in humans . ..
II
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Recollection is ... an elemental phenomenon which aims at giving' . us the time for organizing 'the reception of stimuli' which we ini-1 / tially lacked." 18 The reception of shocks is facilitated by training in;~/ coping with stimuli; if need be, dreams as well as recollection may bel ... . '·.· enlisted. As a rule, however-so Freud assumes-this training de-l · volves upon the wakeful consciousness, located in a part of the cor3 · tex which is "so frayed by the effect of the stimulus" that it offers the most favorable situation for the reception of stimuli. That the shock is thus cushioned, parried by consciousness, would lend the incident that occasions it the character of an isolated experience [Erlebnis), in · ; the strict sense. If it were incorporated directly in the register of con. .· scious memory, it would sterilize this incident for poetic experience '·•· .: [Erfahrung]. : One ·wonders how lyric poetry can be grounded in experience [ein·er Erfahrung] for which exp.osure to shock [Chockerlebnis] has • . become the norm. One would expec~ such poetry to have a large measure of consciousness; it would slilggest that a plan was at work ; · in its composition. This is indeed true of Baudelaire's poetry; it establishes a connection between him and Poe, among his predcessors, and with Valery, among his successors. Proust's and Valery's on Baudelaire complement ·each othe{ providentially. ··. J?.roust wrote an essay on Baudelaire which is actually surpassed in ·.·•· · significance by certain reflections in his novels. In his "Situation de ·· Baudelaire;' Valery supplies the classic introduction to Les Fleurs du .. mal. "Baudelaire's problem," he writes, "must have posed itself in these terms: 'How to be a great poet, but neither a Lamartine nor a Hugo nor a Musset.' 19 I do-not say that.this ambition was conscious!~ .... ~ · ' •nuLL-:·1~;:;:2::..